Even the most famous cinematic werewolf, the titular Wolf Man introduced by Universal Pictures in 1941, has struggled to stand out. Watching these movies back-to-back forces you to confront a reality ...
Circa 2025 Wolf Man starts out appropriately as a take on toxic masculinity and the long scars it leaves, with glimpses of ...
Wolf Man is the next instalment in arguably the oldest franchise in cinema history. Universal Monsters, which evolved through the silent era, features iconic characters like Frankenstein, Dracula, The ...
Leigh Whannell's Wolf Man offers a daring and modern reinterpretation of the 1941 Universal classic, abandoning traditional werewolf tropes for a more visceral and tragic transform ...
Leigh Whannell follows his thrilling Invisible Man with a curiously dull, murky, and undercooked Wolf Man, in theaters now.
The Wolf Man ending has left audiences questioning the true identity of the creature hunting Blake and his family. Directed ...
Wolf Man director Leigh Whannell discusses why classic creatures like the werewolf, Nosferatu, and Frankenstein’s monster still matter, and what Hollywood can do to get them right.
Common Sense Media also reviews “One of Them Days” and “Autumn and the Black Jaguar.” ...
"Wolf Man" has moments of suspense and psychological tension but leans too heavily on jump scares and a weak story, says film ...
The director of 'The Invisible Man' creates another effective modern take on one of the iconic Universal Monsters ...
Leigh Whannell is giving monsters another shot, but his latest film, Wolf Man, doesn't have the same bit as his previous works.
Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man boasts some impressive filmmaking and fresh spins on werewolf lore, but its story lacks bite.